Hamnet
A Novel of the Plague
Book - 2020
0525657606
9780525657613


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CRRL Staff Picks: Best of 2020
2020 has been a challenge, so thank goodness for new books to read. Take a look at our favorite picks released in 2020! CRRL Staff Picks: Best of 2020 So many good books (and movies), so hard to choose! But, we did it, and here are our favorite picks published or released in 2020. This film's camera work increases its impact by simulating one continuous shot as it follows two friends on a… (more)
From Library Staff
Lose yourself in 16th-century Stratford in this beautifully written story about Shakespeare's family. O'Farrell includes rich historical detail and adds an emotional punch as she tells about Agnes, Shakespeare's wife, and the year they lost their son. - Joy
Maggie O'Farrell tells the story of Shakespeare's wife and children in this emotionally engaging, richly detailed historical fiction novel. There's a bit of magical realism, amazing historic details, and it's written beautifully. Selected by CRRL_JoyO
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Add a Commenti read this book to fulfil the goal read a A book that has won the Women's Prize For Fiction. it took me a while to get into it, but i liked the ending very much.
Maggie O'Farrell is an amazing writer. I love her work (I have read a work of nonfiction of hers called "I Am, I Am, I Am" and I loved it, too). The writing in Hamnet is exceptional, and it reads like a work of historical fiction, with an element of mysticism or magical realism. The most abiding feature, though, is the love of a mother and father for their child, Hamnet, who dies from the plague in England. Hamnet is a synonym for Hamlet, and apparently scholars believe that William Shakespeare had a boy named Hamnet who died about three years before he wrote the play, "Hamlet." For me, it wasn't a quick read. There is so much sadness infused throughout the pages. Not many books make me weep. This one did.
I found the ending to this book to be so beautiful I read it twice. A lovely, profound story.
In the first 15 pages of the book the author describes a boy trying to find his relatives in an empty house. Sigh.
On a list of titles I wanted to read in 2020
https://bookshop.org/books/hamnet-9780525657606/9780525657606
What an unusual, beautiful book! As the title indicates, the plot is a fictionalized story of Shakespeare's son Hamnet (or Hamlet), who died (supposedly of plague) when he was only 11. The name Shakespeare is never mentioned in the book, and Anne is here called Agnes (apparently a spelling variation of her name). This is clearly a work of fantasy, a very personal interpretation of events happened many centuries ago and about which we really don't know much. But I liked it very much, I think this is one of the best books I have read in a long time. I don't want to give away too much, so I will just say that the story moves on two levels: Hamnet and Judith's sickness and the story of Agnes and Will's meeting and love. The two levels meet at the moment of the boy's untimely death, when his parents react in radically different ways to their loss. The last pages are the most moving and the author's ending is truly memorable. I was crying when I got to the last sentence. This book is a case of suspension of disbelief, because if you want to read it keeping in mind the truth - or what we think is the truth - you will not enjoy it. O'Farrell creates a world of unbelievable characters that we want to believe, using a style so poetic that you will want to reread several sections just for the pleasure of seeing those words again. If you love Shakespeare or a very good book, this is for you.
a completely absorbing read - full of emotion both tender and raw and gripping in its grief
Lovely writing and a fascinating topic make this book one of my faves of the year. This is a historical reimagining of William Shakespeare's life in which he is not mentioned by name (at least not in the body of the novel itself...I'm sure it's on the flap copy and in the author's note ;) ). It's more the story of his family than of him, and specifically his son, Hamnet, who died of unknown causes as a child. O'Farrell draws a line from the son to the titular character of Hamlet and imagines how the play came by it's name and how it might have affected Anne Hathaway. A compelling read and beautifully written.
An untold story of one lost too soon, Hamnet is about heartbreak, healing, and the parts of us that are never the same. While I typically steer clear of such sad reads, and just forget about child death, it being about the only son of Shakespeare was too compelling and now I'm so glad I didn't pass it up. Maggie O'Farrell has a beautiful voice and she wove this tale with a strong sense of place, lots of historical detail, a dash of magical realism, and fascinating, complex characters. Particularly Hamnet's mother, Agnes, who I feel really stole the show.